175 Ky. 821 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1917
Opinion op the Court by
Affirming.
This action was instituted by the county attorney of Leslie county, in the name of Leslie county, against Mary Hoskins and the sureties on her official bond, as superintendent of public schools of that county, charging that during her incumbency in office she illegally collected and appropriated four hundred dollars of money belonging to the school fund of that county, and seeking to recover said sum on her official bond. This four hundred dollars was allowed by her by the board of education of the county on a claim for expenses which she had incurred. Her salary at the beginning of her term was fixed at six hundred dollars per year, and had been paid at the time of this allowance.
It is the contention of the county that under section 157 of the constitution the superintendent, Miss Hos-kins, was not entitled to make, take or appropriate this sum in the year 1913, the time it was allowed and paid, because the constitutional limit of debt had been reached and exceeded by twenty-nine hundred dollars before the allowance and payment of this claim; and, that, therefore, the attempted allowance was void and payment illegal, and that the county' is entitled to recover this money back; and
It further contended that the salary of the superintendent having been fixed at six hundred dollars per year, and that sum having been paid by the county, and
The appellees, the superintendent and her bondsmen contend:
First. That Leslie county cannot maintain this action ; and,
Second. That the appropriation was not illegal, but that under sub-section 6, of section 4399 of the Kentucky Statutes, she, as superintendent, was entitled to have her necessary expenses paid by the county board of education, and that this sum, four hundred dollars, was so appropriated, and not otherwise.
The case was tried before a jury, and at the conclusion of the evidence for plaintiff, the court, upon motion of defendants, gave peremptory instructions, directing the jury to find and return a verdict for the appellee, Miss Hoskins, and her bondsmen, and from this order and judgment the county appeals.
A motion was entered in this court, by the appellees, to strike the bill of exceptions and dismiss the appeal.
First: Because the bill of exceptions was not filed within the time given by the lower court, but was filed subsequent to the time reserved in the order allowing the filing although at the term fixed.
Second: Because the appeal was not filed in this court within the time allowed by law, but was delayed until after the third term of the convening of this court, after the granting of the appeal in the lower court.
The amount sued for being only four hundred dollars, it is insisted that the appeal should not be granted. While an appeal was granted below, one is also prayed in this court.
It has been repeatedly held by this court that where time is given to a day in a subsequent term to prepare and tender a bill of exceptions and no bill is prepared or tendered within the time given, the bill will not be allowed or considered bv this court. Cases, City of Catlettsburg v. May, 140 Ky. 367, 131 S. W. 15; L. & N. Co. v. Turner, 81 Ky. 489, 5 R. 647; L. & A. Coal Co. v. Morris, 116 S. W. 330, 132 Ky. 223; Nave v. Riley, 146 Ky. 276, 142 S. W. 388.
An order was entered at the June term, 1915, giving appellant until the seventh day of the October term, 1915, in which to prepare and tender his bill of exceptions.
With the bill of exceptions out, we have one question only to be considered by this court — do the pleadings support the judgment? Combs v. Combs, 175 Ky. 523.
“In the absence of a bill of exceptions, the only question presented is, whether the pleadings support the judgment. Sandy Valley & Elkhorn Railway Company v. Moore, supra; Clark v. Wallace Oil Co., et al., 155 Ky. 836, 160 S. W. 506.”
Prom a careful examination of the petition and amendments allowed and filed by the court, we conclude that the plaintiff, if it had a right to sue, stated' a cause of action, but to this petition the defendant filed an answer traversing, in part, the allegations of the petition, and in a separate paragraph admitted that the defendant, Mary Hoskins, was allowed a claim for four hundred dollars for expenses incident to her office, as charged in the petition, but denied that the allowance was made in violation of section 157 of the constitution, and denied that she and her bondsmen were liable for said sum even though it was allowed in violation of said section of the constitution. In the recent case of Beauchamp, &c. v. Snider, et al., 170 Ky. 220, it was held that sub-sections 6 and 7, of section 4399, Kentucky Statutes, upon which appellees rely for authority to appropriate the money sought to be recovered in this action, confer no such power or authority, and the answer, therefore, presents no defense whatever, to the cause of action presented by the petition. It is there held that the county board of education has no right or authority to appropriate any of the school funds in the hands of the treasurer, for the payment of expenses of that officer, except where the expenses have been passed upon and agreed to by the board of education before they are incurred, and an appropriation of funds otherwise is unlawful. This allowance was made to Miss Hoskins on December 31,1913, which was the last day of her term of office as county superintendent, and it is not contended that the allowance had been agreed to, allowed, or passed upon before the expense was incurred. This being true, the appropriation was illegal.
For the reasons indicated, the appeal is granted and the judgment is affirmed. But this does not prejudice the right of the board of education of Leslie county, or in case of its failure, the right of a taxpayer of that county, to institute and maintain a proper action to recover this fund.